With the Mayor, Celebrating 60 Years of Kiestwood, Where No Change is Good Change

Raymond Crawford presents Mayor Rawlings with a big hairy portfolio of ideas from the community.

​The Kiestwood neighborhood in southeast Dallas turns 60 this month, and in Texas years, that's old. Raymond Crawford, who lives in the home where he grew up, hosted a well-attended birthday party for the close-knit neighborhood at the Southwood United Methodist Church last night, and both Mayor Mike Rawlings and Councilman Scott Griggs showed up to give the ol' neib a howya doin', happy birthday.

Crawford, no stranger to Unfair Park thanks to his gas-drilling activism, welcomed the crowd, and before passing the mic to Mayor Mike presented him with a booklet of ideas for Dallas from community members. "I read in the paper a couple weeks ago that he's very big on big hairy ideas," Crawford said, handing the mayor an over-sized portfolio covered in brown hair like the coat of an old brown poodle.

"Not anymore, but when I was younger, that looks like my chest,"
Rawlings joked, promising that he would read all 115 ideas. The
mayor took the podium and laid out many of his concerns and hopes for
Dallas. "Some people have asked me [if] am I enjoying it yet," he said of his
new gig, "and I said I think so." He said he feels a bit like a
16-year-old with a new car. As in: He likes it, he's confident, but he's
cautious not to mess up a good opportunity.

Harkening back to
his campaign speeches, he stressed the importance of growing southern
Dallas and of improving Dallas's schools. "I'm going to make sure
that I keep my focus on southern Dallas and education, and the rest will
take care of itself," he said.

Griggs picked up where the mayor
left off, stressing that Dallas must "return to the basics." We have
enough "high-budget projects" to attract tourists and commuters, he
said, adding that quality-of-life spending has decreased over the past
decade.

One Kiestwood resident stood up and noted his
community's continued local engagement: "We only have to look at this
room to see that we've done everything right." He noted the diversity of
the crowd, a mix of ages and races impossible to characterize.

Among
the longest-standing Kiestwood residents was Lillye "Lil" England, a 92-year-old
who has been living in her home since May 1, 1961. "I looked at my husband, and I said I want this house," she
said of the first time she laid eyes on the quaint three-bedroom with the kitchen facing
Bonnywood Lane.

"The biggest change is that there hasn't been a
change, which is very good," Crawford said of the neighborhood and its
long-standing residents. "It's a Leave It to Beaver neighborhood with a
21st century twist," he said.